it allows water to carry dissolved substances in our blood.
No, boiling does not affect the polarity of water. What it does is create enough energy for the water molecules to separate from one another. But the water molecules are still polar.
Water is a versatile molecule because of its polarity.
specific heat
Dissolving is just when water bonds and separates the cation and anion. Water's polarity is the reason why it surrounds each ion and separates it from the oppositely charged ion thus dissolving it. The negative end of the water surround the positive ion and the positively charged end of water surround the negative ion. If there is a polar molecule it will bond in a network with the polar water molecules This is why water will not dissolve non-polar molecules because the polarity has no affect on a non-polar molecule.
The movement of molecules are very important on earth, and they happen in and on every living organism. (totally wrong above this) Think of water molecules as magnets; each with an opposing pole. Like magnets, water molecules repel each other when two parts of the same pole are pushed together. The polarity of the water does the same thing, pushing the molecules apart.
No, boiling does not affect the polarity of water. What it does is create enough energy for the water molecules to separate from one another. But the water molecules are still polar.
The polarity of water results in the ability of water to dissolve other hydrophilic molecules
Hydrogen bonds form between water molecules due to water's polarity.
Water is a versatile molecule because of its polarity.
specific heat
Dissolving is just when water bonds and separates the cation and anion. Water's polarity is the reason why it surrounds each ion and separates it from the oppositely charged ion thus dissolving it. The negative end of the water surround the positive ion and the positively charged end of water surround the negative ion. If there is a polar molecule it will bond in a network with the polar water molecules This is why water will not dissolve non-polar molecules because the polarity has no affect on a non-polar molecule.
The polarity of water.
specific heat
No, the molecules move farther apart
Dissolving is just when water bonds and separates the cation and anion. Water's polarity is the reason why it surrounds each ion and separates it from the oppositely charged ion thus dissolving it. The negative end of the water surround the positive ion and the positively charged end of water surround the negative ion. If there is a polar molecule it will bond in a network with the polar water molecules This is why water will not dissolve non-polar molecules because the polarity has no affect on a non-polar molecule.
The movement of molecules are very important on earth, and they happen in and on every living organism. (totally wrong above this) Think of water molecules as magnets; each with an opposing pole. Like magnets, water molecules repel each other when two parts of the same pole are pushed together. The polarity of the water does the same thing, pushing the molecules apart.
Hydrogen Bond